The letter W is usually paired with another letter. W is most often at the start of a word or as the second letter. At the start of a word W is usually before a vowel, except in the case of WH which we will cover later. W and vowels will also be covered later. When W is the second letter after a consonant, the usual combinations are DW, SW and TW.1
DW at the start of a word was common in Old English and the structure survived into a few words in Modern English. The most common DW words are dwindle, dwarf or dwell and their derivatives.
WR at the start of a word was common in Old English, but the W became silent by the beginning of Modern English. Examples include: write, wrinkle, wrestle, wrist and wrong.
SW at the start of a word was common in Old English and the structure survived into Modern English. Examples include: swing, sweet, sweat, swallow and swear. In the word sword, from the Old English sweord, the W fell silent in Middle English. Since swords were used by the nobility and they spoke French, dropping the awkward English W made the word simpler (for French speakers) to pronounce.
TW at the start of a word was common in Old English and the structure survived into Modern English. Examples include: twig, twit, twenty, twitch.... In the word two, from the Old English twa, the W fell silent and two can now be confused with to/too.
The Old English HW spelling pattern is important because it became our Modern English WH and is found in many very important words. I will cover this pattern next time. W after a vowel occurs most often at the end of a word and has an important effect in controlling the vowel, I will cover that combination in the following article.
Except for compound words, such as cobweb and halfway, WR, DW, SW, TW and WH are the usual W consonant pairs used in English spelling at the front of rootwords.
Footnotes:
1. The letter W is the also the second letter after a consonant in the Old English combinations CW and HW. Those Old English combinations are important because they create certain modern spelling patterns to be discussed in a later article.
Related Articles:
‧AW
‧B
‧CK
‧CC
‧SC
‧Silent D Is Not Always Silent
‧D
‧Hard And Soft G Spelling Patterns
‧No English words end with the letter i?
‧Old English Spelling Patterns with K
‧Foreign spelling patterns with K
‧NG
‧When is Initial U Short and when is it Long?
‧X
‧Pronouncing The Letter Y At The Front Of A Word
‧Pronouncing The Letter Y In The Middle Of A Word
‧Pronouncing The letter Y At The End Of A Word
‧The letter Y & The Double Vowel Rule
‧The Last Letter is a Foreigner
‧Silent letters and why English spelling is such a mess (1): Old English
‧Silent letters and why English spelling is such a mess (2): Fake Latin
‧I Both Love and Hate Spell-Checkers
‧The Rule: I before E, except after C
by John Larrysson [email protected]
A native English speaker who has been teaching practical English in Hong Kong for over two decades.
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